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Zelensky labels Putin a 'slave to war'
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky denounced Russia's Vladimir Putin as a "slave to war" in a speech to the Munich Security Conference Saturday, adding that Russia's attacks had damaged every power plant in the country.
Zelensky also drew parallels between the current talks between Russia and Ukraine over territorial concessions and the 1938 Munich Agreement, when Hitler forced territorial concessions from the European powers -- a year before World War II.
Zelensky was speaking days before the fourth anniversary of Moscow's invasion, which has killed hundreds of thousands, decimated eastern Ukraine and forced millions to flee.
Moscow's attacks on the country's power infrastructure have left millions in the cold. Kyiv and its Western allies have accused Moscow of deliberately freezing Ukraine's population with the energy grid strikes.
"There is not a single power plant left in Ukraine that has not been damaged by Russian attacks," Zelensky said. "Not one."
"But we still generate electricity," he added, praising the thousands of workers repairing the plants.
Once again, he appealed to the West to deliver air-defence systems to Ukraine more quickly.
Of Putin, who launched the war in February 2022, Zelensky said: "He may see himself as a tsar, but in reality he is a slave to war."
Russia and Ukraine will hold US-brokered talks next week, and Zelensky said Kyiv was doing "everything" to end the war.
- Security guarantees -
Zelensky also met with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on the sidelines of the Munich conference.
Russia has demanded that Ukraine withdraw from its Donetsk region and wants Kyiv recognise its claim to the swathes of Ukraine that it occupies. Ukraine has ruled out surrendering its eastern regions.
Of the talks so far, Zelensky said: "The Americans often return to the topic of concessions, and too often those concessions are discussed in the context only of Ukraine."
He also drew parallels between the current talks and the 1938 Munich Agreement, when European powers let Hitler take part of Czechoslovakia only for the Second World War to break out the following year.
"It would be an illusion to believe that this war can now be reliably ended by dividing Ukraine -- just as it was an illusion to believe that sacrificing Czechoslovakia would save Europe from a great war," he warned.
Kyiv was doing "everything" to end the war, he said, insisting that viable security guarantees were the only way to get to a deal and prevent future Russian aggression.
"With Russia, you cannot leave a single loophole Russians can use to start a war," he said.
Zelensky again argued that there would be more chance of ending the war if European countries had a seat at the negotiating table -- something Russia has opposed.
Next week's talks between the two sides will come after two rounds of US-Russia-Ukraine negotiations in Abu Dhabi. Originally planned for Geneva, The Swiss authorities said on Saturday that they would in fact take place in Oman.
With no diplomatic breakthrough in sight, the Ukrainian leader called on his Western allies to make faster political decisions.
"Weapons evolve faster than political decisions meant to stop them," Zelensky said. The Iranian-designed Shahed drones that Russia was using had become much more deadly, he noted.
Returning to the question of elections in Ukraine, Zelensky said they would be held once Kyiv received security guarantees and a ceasefire had been agreed.
M.O.Allen--AT